Chapter 6

Ava Vitiello POV

Liam arrived ten minutes later, looking like a man who had sprinted all the way from midtown.

He wasn't running, strictly speaking. He was walking fast, flanked by Mark, a low-level associate who looked like he would rather be anywhere else.

Chloe was in Liam's arms. Sarah was standing by the perfume counter, sobbing into a tissue that looked suspiciously dry.

I stood my ground. The Patek Philippe weighed heavy in my purse, a cold lump of metal that represented my reclaimed dignity.

Liam saw me. His eyes were bloodshot. He looked exhausted, the kind of exhaustion that comes from fighting a war on two fronts and losing both.

"Ava," he breathed.

He put Chloe down. The child immediately ran to Sarah, burying her face in her mother's skirt.

Sarah pointed a manicured finger at me.

"She stole my watch, Liam! She cut the card! She attacked me!"

It was a performance worthy of Broadway—if Broadway cast actors with zero talent and too much filler in their lips.

I didn't flinch. I watched Liam. I watched him weigh the crying woman against the Vitiello princess standing in front of him.

"I didn't attack her, Liam," I said calmly. "I just revoked her access to my bank account."

Liam ran a hand through his hair. He looked at the crowd gathering near the exits. He looked at the security guards who were watching him closely, knowing he was already on thin ice with the Family.

"Give it back, Ava," he said. His voice was pleading. "Please. Just give it back. I promised her."

"You promised me a lot of things too," I said.

The silence that followed was deafening.

Sarah wailed louder. Chloe started to cry, a high-pitched sound that grated on my nerves. Sarah was pinching the girl's shoulder. I saw it. A subtle dig of nails into soft flesh to provoke a reaction.

Disgust rose in my throat like bile.

"You want the watch?" I asked.

"Yes!" Sarah screamed.

I looked at Liam.

"I'll give you a choice, Liam."

I pulled a folded document from my purse. I had been carrying it for days, waiting for the right moment. It was a transfer of ownership form for his ten percent tribute shares in the waterfront construction racket. It was his only remaining steady income.

"Sign this," I said. "Sign over your points to me. And she can keep the watch."

Sarah stopped crying instantly. Her eyes darted between the paper and the purse.

"No!" she shrieked. "Liam, no! That's our money!"

Liam looked at the paper. He knew what those points meant. They were his status. They were his retirement.

He looked at Sarah. He looked at the tears streaming down her face, the way she clutched the child like a shield.

He looked at me. He saw the ice in my eyes. He saw that I was not bluffing.

"If I walk out of here with this watch, Liam, I sell it and donate the money to a cat shelter," I said. "And then I call my father and tell him you're harassing me in public."

He flinched.

Sarah grabbed his arm.

"Don't you dare, Liam! That watch is worth five thousand! The shares are worth millions over time!"

She was doing the math. She was always doing the math.

Liam pulled his arm away from her. He looked defeated. He looked like a man who just wanted the screaming to stop.

"Give me the pen," he whispered.

"Liam!" Sarah screamed.

"Shut up, Sarah!" he roared.

The store went silent. Chloe hiccuped.

Liam took the pen from my hand. He didn't read the document. He pressed the paper against the glass countertop and signed his name.

He signed away his future for a moment of peace.

He handed the paper back to me. His hand was shaking.

"Give her the watch," he said. His voice was dead.

I reached into my purse and pulled out the watch. I tossed it onto the counter.

Sarah lunged for it like a starving dog. She didn't check on Liam. She didn't check on Chloe. She checked the watch face for scratches.

I folded the document and put it in my bag.

"Pleasure doing business with you, Soldato," I said.

I turned and walked away. I didn't look back. I didn't need to. I knew exactly what I was leaving behind. A man who had just sold his crown for a piece of costume jewelry.

Chapter 7

Ava Vitiello POV

The adrenaline crash didn't hit me until the silence of the armored SUV settled in.

I told the driver to pull over two blocks from the estate. Sliding into the corner of the leather seat, I let the tremors take me.

It wasn't sadness. It was the terrifying, hollow echo of absolute victory.

I had won. I had dismantled him. I had stripped him of his assets, incinerated his status, and flayed his dignity.

And yet, I felt nothing but a bone-deep cold.

My phone buzzed against my thigh. The screen lit up with a single word from my father.

Study.

I wiped my face, checked the sharpness of my eyeliner in the rearview mirror, and signaled the driver to move.

The Don’s study was a cavern of mahogany and cigar smoke.

I stood before the massive desk, waiting. He didn't grant me the courtesy of looking up from his papers.

"It's done?" he asked, his voice gravel.

"He signed the points over," I replied, my voice steady. "Every fraction."

"Good."

Only then did he raise his head. His eyes were dark, unreadable abysses.

"You have had your fun, Ava. You have scorched the earth. Now, it is time to build."

He slid a thick manila file across the polished wood.

"Paris," he said.

I flipped the file open. It was a dossier on Vitiello International's European division. It was bleeding money. It was a mess that required a surgeon's scalpel.

It needed a Vitiello.

"You leave in the morning," he commanded.

I didn't argue. New York had become a graveyard of memories I had no desire to mourn.

Back at the penthouse, the silence was heavy.

I was folding my cashmere sweaters, preparing to pack the last of my life into a suitcase, when the news broke.

A notification lit up my phone, cold and impartial.

Liam Rossi and Sarah Miller married in civil ceremony at City Hall.

No fanfare. No guests. Just a signature on a government form to seal a fate.

I turned the phone off, face down.

Then came the knock.

I knew who it was before my hand touched the cold metal of the knob. The rhythm was hesitant. Familiar. A ghost from a life I had just buried.

I opened the door.

Liam stood there. He reeked of cheap whiskey and the metallic scent of rain.

"I'm leaving," I said, my voice flat.

"I know," he rasped. "I heard."

He stepped into the frame of the door, but stopped at the threshold. He knew the rules. He knew he had lost the right to enter my sanctuary.

"Why did you do it?" I asked.

It was the question that had been rotting in my gut for three agonizing months. Not why he cheated—men were weak. Men cheated. But why he humiliated me. Why he burned us to the ground.

He leaned his forehead against the doorframe, his posture collapsing under invisible weight.

"She recorded me," he whispered.

I frowned. "What?"

"The tech startup," he said, his eyes squeezing shut. "I was moving money. Dirty money. Off the books, without your father's sanction. I was trying to prove I could earn like... like a real earner. Sarah found the files."

I stared at him, the pieces finally clicking into a grotesque picture.

"She threatened to go to the FBI," he continued, the words spilling out like bile. "She said she'd trade the evidence for immunity. She said if I didn't marry her, if I didn't give the kid a name, she'd bury me. She’d bury the Family."

The realization hit me harder than any physical blow.

He didn't choose love. He didn't even choose the child.

He chose fear.

"You coward," I breathed.

He looked up, tears pooling in his bloodshot eyes.

"I didn't want to die in prison, Ava. I didn't want to be a rat. So I became a husband."

He reached out a trembling hand toward me.

"I love you," he choked out. "I never stopped."

I looked at his hand. It was the hand of a drowning man who would pull me under just to keep his own head above water.

"You didn't love me, Liam," I said, stepping back. "You loved the safety I provided."

I gripped the door handle, my knuckles white.

"And now, you have neither."

"Please," he begged.

"Goodbye, Liam."

I slammed the door. The deadbolt slid home with a final, metallic thud.

I slid down to the floor, pressing my back against the wood, listening to his footsteps retreat down the long, empty hall.

You made your bed, Soldato. Die in it.

Chapter 8

Ava Vitiello POV

Five years is a long time to bury a ghost.

Paris had been my salvation. The rain there washed things clean in a way New York rain never did. In those five years, I had taken the European division from a failing laundering front to a legitimate real estate empire.

I was no longer the Jilted Princess. I was the Queen of the Seine.

But blood always calls you back.

My father's seventieth birthday gala was mandatory. The entire Commission would be there.

I walked into the ballroom of the Pierre Hotel wearing a dress that cost more than Liam's life insurance policy. It was emerald green, backless, and dangerous—less a garment and more a declaration of war.

The room parted for me. Whispers followed in my wake.

"She's back."

"She looks lethal."

I took a glass of champagne from a passing tray and surveyed the room with bored detachment.

Then, I saw him near the buffet.

Time had not been kind to Liam Rossi.

He had gained weight. His hairline was receding, a losing battle against gravity. The sharp jawline I used to trace with my fingers was softened by cheap alcohol and too much stress.

He was wearing a suit that was clearly off the rack. The sleeves were too long, swallowing his hands.

He saw me.

He froze. The meatball on his fork slipped and fell back onto his plate with a wet splat.

He started walking toward me. He looked desperate. He looked like a man crossing a desert who just saw water.

"Ava," he said when he got close, his voice breathless.

I didn't smile. I didn't frown. I just looked at him like he was a piece of furniture I had sold at a garage sale and forgotten about until this very moment.

"Hello, Liam."

"You look... incredible," he stammered, wiping his sweaty palms on his trousers.

"You look tired," I said.

He flinched as if I'd slapped him.

"Business is hard," he said, shifting his weight. "The market changes."

"I heard you're driving Uber on the weekends," I said coolly.

His face went red.

"It's temporary," he muttered, eyes darting around to see if anyone had heard. "Just until the next big thing hits."

Suddenly, there was a commotion at the entrance.

Voices were raised. Security was trying to stop someone.

"Let me go! I am his wife!"

The room went silent.

Sarah burst into the ballroom.

She looked like a wreck. Her hair was frizzy, her makeup was smeared, and she was dragging a ten-year-old Chloe by the arm.

Chloe was crying. Sarah was screaming.

"Where is he?" Sarah shrieked, her voice cracking. "Where is that lying bastard?"

She scanned the room wildly. Her eyes landed on Liam. Then, slowly, they slid to me.

Her face twisted into a mask of pure, unadulterated hate.

I took a slow sip of my champagne.

"Your carriage awaits, Liam," I said softly.

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